Jer 29 | TSK | STEP | Jeremiah sends a letter to the captives in Babylon to be quiet there, and not to believe the dreams of their prophets; and that they shall return with grace after seventy years. He foretells the destruction of the rest for their disobedience. He shews the fearful end of Ahab and Zedekiah, two lying prophets. Shemaiah writes a letter against Jeremiah. Jeremiah foretells his doom.
Cir. A.M. 3407. B.C. 597. Now.This transaction is supposed to have taken place in the first
or second year of Zedekiah.
of the letter. the elders.

hear.Dr. Blayney thinks there were two letters written by the
prophet to the captives in Babylon, and the first ends with
this verse. That having heard, on the return of the embassy,
that the captives had received his advices favourably, and
because they were deceived by false prophets, who promised
them a speedier deliverance, he therefore wrote a second
letter, beginning with the fifteenth verse, and going on with
the twenty-first, etc. (in which order these verses are read
in the Septuagint,) in which he denounces God's judgments on
the three chief of those, Ahab, Zedekiah, and Shemaiah.

You can mix most searches. This finds any word translated as 'throne' in the Prophets and the New Testament, but only in verses concerning the topic 'David'. This excludes verses which refer to a 'throne' in other contexts.